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Cheap
Eats:
Fabada Asturiana
Asturian Bean and Meat Stew
by Cynthia Clampitt
I look more like my mom, but on the inside, I’m pretty much my daddy’s girl. It
was from my dad that I inherited a passion for poetry, a love of trying new
things, and a gift for exploring new places and making them mine. He’s the one
who introduced me to mangoes, calamari, escargot, good wine, and trying
everything once. He taught me how to look at great art, how to speak enough
Italian to get around Rome, and how to tell stories and jokes. He bought me my
first microscope and blew glass instruments over mom’s gas stove for my science
projects.
Dad’s example was of good, hard work, putting your family first, and making the most
of every opportunity offered. He loved people and made friends easily and
everywhere. When we went to Rome, dad made friends with the legendary Alfredo,
and I have a photograph of Alfredo sitting with me while I’m dining on his
sublime fettuccine. When I was a teenager, dad was involved in a product
promotion with Kenny Rogers (back when he was still with the First Edition).
They ended up friends, and we got to go out for dinner with Kenny and the band
when they were in town. His friendship with the president of JAL led to our
having a full Japanese tea ceremony in our living room at home. That was the
best part of dad’s friendships. It never occurred to him leave us out.
He was the quintessential nice guy, the champion of the underdog. He coached the
team of players no one wanted in the local youth basketball league, and took
them on to championship victory. The photograph of that odd lot of little boys
posing with their trophies still makes me a bit misty.
There is a moment that remains vividly in my mind that seems to sum up dad’s outlook.
My mom, dad, and I had just eaten at Mike Fink’s, a restaurant in Cincinnati
that is on a 1920s riverboat. I had forgotten to get a postcard of the place,
and dad had quickly offered to run back. As he walked down the gangplank,
examining with obvious delight the postcards he’d just bought for me, mom leaned
toward me and said, “You know, there is no one in the world who
gets more pleasure out of doing things for others than your father.”
He would have made a great Mensan. He was an inveterate punster, loved puzzles and
games, and could quote obscure things he had learned decades earlier. Even as
Alzheimer’s disease eroded almost everything else, he could still quote his
favorite Shakespearean sonnet (Sonnet 116).
He loved wood carving, working in clay, and building things, so my brother and I
never had to worry about finding someone to play with. And it never occurred to
him that there was anything I couldn’t do because I’m a girl. Whatever he did
with my brother, he’d do with me, from making us tomahawks (he’d had an Indian
blood-brother when he was growing up in Florida, so we had an early education
in Indian lore), to hiking and climbing, to building airplane models—and
building a Fokker Tri-plane together is a favorite memory.
His creativity was not limited to home projects. While Director of Advertising for
United Airlines, he introduced the “fly the friendly skies” campaign. From his
early days at Alcoa through to his later days in the candy industry, he worked
with some of the top people in a surprising range of industries, including Walt
Disney, Saul Bellow, and other creative luminaries. And the great thing was,
he’d come home and ask for our input on everything, as if we were part of his
success.
My father wasn’t perfect. He had weaknesses, as well as some “baggage” from a sad,
hard childhood. He could be volatile. But he was also quite wonderful. My mind
is full of the things he did, the things he was, and of how much he loved me,
my brother, mom. Family was the key to the universe
for him, and he always considered it the best part of his life.
Mom was a good match for dad: smart, educated, classy, funny, artistic, strong,
tenacious, opinionated. But this is not about her,
because I still have her. But my dad is gone, now. On November 19, 2003, he
finally lost his battle with the several afflictions that have been wearing him
down for the last few years.
As much as dad loved trying new things, I can remember a time when he fell in love
with one dish almost to the exclusion of all others. We were in Spain. Our
hotel in Madrid offered a dish from Asturia, and dad
had it at least six times in the ten days we were there. Needless to say, I had
to find a recipe for this regional specialty and make it for him. I was able to
serve fabada Asturiana to my dad one more time for his 80th birthday.
Fabada Asturiana
Asturian Bean and Meat Stew
1 lb. dried fava beans or 5 lb. fresh pods (see notes)
1 Tbsp. olive oil
1/4 lb. thick-sliced bacon, cut into 1-inch pieces
8-10 large cloves garlic, minced
4 onions, coarsely chopped
1 large carrot, peeled and coarsely chopped
1/2 lb. lean beef, cut in bite-size pieces
1 ham hock (about 1 pound)
1 lb. spicy, flavorful pork sausage (see notes)
2 bay leaves
1 Tbsp. Spanish paprika, or regular paprika plus 1/4 tsp. hot red pepper
Salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
Soak dry beans overnight or shell fresh beans. If using dried beans, see notes below
for variation. From this point forward, this is for the fresh beans.
In a large casserole or stock pot, heat oil and cook bacon over medium heat for 3
or 4 minutes. Add garlic, onions, and carrot. Reduce to low and cook for 30
minutes, stirring occasionally.
Add ham hock, beef, sausage, bay leaf, and paprika. Add water to barely cover
(about 6 cups). Bring to a boil, skimming foam and fat from top as it rises.
Reduce heat and simmer, partially covered, on very low heat for about 1 hour.
Add fresh, shelled beans and simmer for an additional 1/2 hour, or until beans
are tender and juicy. Remove ham hock and defat
surface of stew. Take meat off ham hock, cut up, and return to the pot. Discard
bay leves. Taste for seasoning, and
adjust add salt and pepper, if needed. Serve warm (for authenticity, use
a clay bowl—though any way you serve it, it’s great). Serves
6-8.
Notes: The traditional
sausage used would be a 50/50 combo of Spanish chorizo and Morcilla,
a Spanish blood sausage. I don’t do blood (probably too much time in the blood
pathology lab at Baxter Labs), so I just use chorizo. Mexican chorizo is
different from Spanish, but is still delicious, if Spanish proves hard to find.
Whatever you choose, be sure to remove the casing.
Fava beans are also known as broad beans, feve, faba, and habas, with the name differing regionally. However, though
you’ll often see a variety of names in recipes, you’ll usually see them as favas or broad beans in stores.
Depending on the time of year, this stew may be made with either fresh or dried beans.
Fresh beans require less cooking time and are more flavorful. Dried beans are
available all year (though often only at ethnic grocers), but need to be soaked
overnight and then peeled (actually, an easy job—just make a slit with a sharp
knife, and the skin comes off like a little jacket). Sometimes, even fresh
beans need to be peeled, if they are very mature, which you can tell by looking
at the little stripe on top where the bean connects to the pod. If it’s black,
the bean is mature and should probably be peeled.
To adjust for the use of dried beans: Reserve water from soaked beans to make up
part of the liquid added to the stew. Put all the meat, seasonings, and beans
in the pot at the same time. Add soaking liquid and water to cover,
bring to the boil, and simmer for 2-1/2 hours. (All other steps match those
above.)
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